A 20th birthday deserves room to breathe. This February, the gallery is moving into a larger space at 33/B Ráday Street (Ráday utca) and throwing open its doors on February 11 with fresh works by Zsolt Molnár, a rising voice in the gallery’s younger generation who is rethinking graphic art from the ground up. His new show brings together nearly a year and a half of work and grapples with time itself, staging a tense face-off between impermanence and transformation. Entry is free, and you have until March 13 to catch it.
What’s Changing
The move isn’t just about square footage. It’s a pivot toward a more experimental visual language, with Molnár zeroing in on how images age, mutate, and refuse to sit still. Think slow-burn shifts rather than instant shocks, where the trace of a line becomes a clock and the surface becomes a witness.
Why It Matters
At 20, the gallery isn’t settling. It’s sharpening its edge and betting on artists who redraw the map instead of coloring inside the lines.





